I've started doing videos for the Technophiles newscast! Check out the first one below. I discuss how research on Earth and in space helps further our understanding of how certain forms of light affect our sleep patterns.
Antares Spacecraft Delivers and Gets Trashed
Private companies are once again helping NASA achieve its missions. SpaceX has grabbed most of the news, but Orbital Sciences is another company on the move. Orbital's Antares rocket launched this past weekend with the its Cygnus spacecraft on board, filled with 3,300 lbs of valuable supplies for our astronauts in the ISS. Supplies on the Cygnus spacecraft include:
- Nanosatellites designed to take images of Earth. The more pics, the better!
- TechEdSat-4, which will help small samples to be returned to Earth from the space station.Being able to send small samples back to the planet, instead of needing to launch a retrievable spacecraft to collect it, will result in much quicker experiment turnaround.
- Satellites (SPHERES) to enable 3-D mapping and robotic navigation inside the space station.
After the supplies are moved from the Cygnus spacecraft to the ISS, Cygnus gets trashed. No, Cygnus doesn't stop by a local bar - the astronauts literally fill the spacecraft with trash and send it back down to burn up in Earth's atmosphere. Gotta go out with a bang!
Check out an amazing pic by one of NASA's incredible photographers:
Space Is Not Friendly to Myopic Idiots
"You don't get to go live on the space station because you're a myopic idiot. So you don't need to treat the people that are speaking on behalf of the program as if their myopia and inherent idoacy will constantly cause them to say bad things."
Successful communication of your ideas can be just as important as the idea itself.
There is a stereotype that scientifically inclined people have communication problems. Scientists are seen as folks that can only speak with other scientists, either because they lack the basic communication skills or because they view themselves as above other non-scientific people. I've definitely seen both cases of this, but it's a small minority. Part of the mission of this blog is to eliminate this stereotype.
The above quote about myopic idiots by Chris Hadfield, former International Space Shuttle (ISS) Commander, speaks to the importance of opening our space research to all. The scientists and others involved with getting machinery and humans into space and back again should be trusted to share the awesomeness with others. Astronauts in particular are trained to do incredible things - why not share it to as many people as possible?
It's so funny to see Hadfield participate in a video chat from Earth. He's been a prolific fixture in audio and video chats during his time in space, so I'm used to seeing him in a spacesuit. Check out the Google+ hangout below where Hadfield speaks about the space program and the need to be open and communicate the value of NASA and other government organizations.
Space Living: Now and the Future
Astronauts are currently enjoying space living and travel via the International Space Station (ISS), but what about the future? If the answer is on a government owned site, we're all lost. Almost all government websites and social media accounts are offline due to the government shutdown here in the good old United States. Luckily, the inefficiency of Congress doesn't reach out to Earth orbit, because past and present astronaut bios are still online (probably hosted on a non-government server), and the astronauts in the ISS are still tweeting! Check out this wonderful shot from astronaut Luca Parmitano (@Astro_Luca):
Impossible not to smile with such a view! Impossibile non sorridere con un simile panorama! #Volare pic.twitter.com/wvWABNZnqs
— Luca Parmitano (@astro_luca) October 16, 2013
Luca and others are living that space life. Former astronaut Garret Reisman visited the Q&A website Quora to give us some insight on what it's like to transition into life in space. Via Quora:
At first it's just weird.
All kinds of things are happening to your body. Your vestibular system is all messed up - your inner ear isn't working at all and it's sending garbage signals to your brain. Your heart, which is used to pumping against gravity to do its most important job, delivering oxygenated blood to your brain, is now pumping too much and your head gets all puffed-up. (I woke up in the middle of my first night in orbit and wondered why I was standing on my head for a few seconds, until I realized, no - I was just in space.) When you close your eyes to go to sleep, you see lightning flashes inside your eyeballs.
And you have a hard time just moving around. The first day is filled with apologies as you inevitably kick or elbow your crewmates as you thrash around like a fish out of water.
But eventually you get the hang of it, and for those of us who were lucky enough to do long-duration missions, about a month into flight you finally really get used to it. Then you wake up in the morning, float out of your sleeping bag, shoot across the space station like superman and turn a few somersaults on the way to the galley for breakfast.
Now you are a real spaceman!
It's pretty amazing that it takes a month to get used to it. It usually takes me a few days to get over something as simple as jetlag if I'm flying across the country. Then again, I may be at home in space since here on Earth I'm already known for inevtiably kicking or elbowing people close to me due to my clumsiness.
Below are a few more interesting videos from the Quora thread. Former ISS Commander Sunita Williams gives us a walk through in Nov 2012 before she departs back to Earth. On the second video, YouTube user VSauce speaks about how long it may take us to truly live amongst the stars. Check them out!
Gravity + Neil deGrasse Tyson = Awesome
I like space. I like movies. I like space movies. Contact is one of my favorite movies of all time, and introduced me to Carl Sagan. Moon is a lesser known flick that I've recommended to many folks. And Apollo 13 was better than most Tom Hanks movies.
I saw Gravity this weekend and it left a huge impression on me. The acting and dialogue was good, but the breathtaking portions involved little to no dialogue and facisnating shots of the Earth, stars, floating astronauts, and satellites that may or may not survive.
There was even a Shareef in the movie! Ok, a Sharif. Close enough.
The movie was extremely fun, and there were some great scientifically accurate parts (i.e. sound can't carry in space so there is no sound). With that said, it is a movie, and some things are exaggerated for truth. Everyone's favorite astrophysicist Neil deGrasse tyson does his best job to ruin the party.
Mysteries of #Gravity: Why Bullock, a medical Doctor, is servicing the Hubble Space Telescope.
— Neil deGrasse Tyson (@neiltyson) October 6, 2013
Mysteries of #Gravity: When Clooney releases Bullock's tether, he drifts away. In zero-G a single tug brings them together.
— Neil deGrasse Tyson (@neiltyson) October 6, 2013
Mysteries of #Gravity: How Hubble (350mi up) ISS (230mi up) & a Chinese Space Station are all in sight lines of one another.
— Neil deGrasse Tyson (@neiltyson) October 6, 2013
Mysteries of #Gravity: Why anyone is impressed with a zero-G film 45 years after being impressed with "2001:A Space Odyssey"
— Neil deGrasse Tyson (@neiltyson) October 6, 2013
Mysteries of #Gravity: Why Bullock's hair, in otherwise convincing zero-G scenes, did not float freely on her head.
— Neil deGrasse Tyson (@neiltyson) October 6, 2013
Mysteries of #Gravity: Astronaut Clooney informs medical doctor Bullock what happens medically during oxygen depravation.
— Neil deGrasse Tyson (@neiltyson) October 6, 2013
Mysteries of #Gravity: Nearly all satellites orbit Earth west to east yet all satellite debris portrayed orbited east to west
— Neil deGrasse Tyson (@neiltyson) October 6, 2013
Mysteries of #Gravity: Satellite communications were disrupted at 230 mi up, but communications satellites orbit 100x higher.
— Neil deGrasse Tyson (@neiltyson) October 6, 2013
Mysteries of #Gravity: Why we enjoy a SciFi film set in make-believe space more than we enjoy actual people set in real space
— Neil deGrasse Tyson (@neiltyson) October 6, 2013
Neil just can't help being a scientist. I don't blame him at all. I couldn't even bring myself to criticize the movie though because I LOVED it.
Spaaaaace (@ Marcus North Shore Cinema - @marcus_theatres for Gravity) http://t.co/pvt8sAL6vi
— Shareef Jackson (@ShareefJackson) October 4, 2013
Gravity is INCREDIBLE. A must see film even if you're not into space. Wow.
— Shareef Jackson (@ShareefJackson) October 5, 2013
Beautifully shot, beautiful music, and a great job by Bullock who I'm not normally a big fan. And mostly scientifically accurate
— Shareef Jackson (@ShareefJackson) October 5, 2013
PLUS GRAVITY HAS SOMEONE NAMED SHAREEF IN IT. CLOONEY SAYS MY NAME SEVERAL TIMES
— Shareef Jackson (@ShareefJackson) October 5, 2013
He probably doesn't spell it with two e's but whatever. Gotta take what I can get
— Shareef Jackson (@ShareefJackson) October 5, 2013